Condensed Matter Seminar Series

Quantum Impurity Physics with Microwave Photons

Moshe Goldstein

Yale University

Thursday February 7,  11:30 am,  Room 298,  Physics Building

Abstract: We consider the propagation of microwave photons along an array of superconducting grains with a set of weakly-coupled grains at its center. Quantum fluctuations of charge on the weakly-coupled grains make the process of “photon splitting” effective. In such a process, a single incoming photon may be split into a number of photons of lower energy.  The minimal number of photons so created depends on the symmetry properties of the corresponding quantum impurity model. As an example, we consider a specific circuit allowing quantum fluctuations between two charge configurations of two weakly-coupled grains, thus mimicking the behavior of an anisotropic Kondo impurity. We relate the total rate of conversion of incoming photons into the lower-energy ones to the linear dynamic spin susceptibility of the Kondo model. The spectral distribution of the outgoing photons yields information about higher-order local correlations in the quantum impurity dynamics.


Host: Harold Baranger



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